I know! I tried to work something out for my trip but nothing worked out. I'm going to try to go to most PSP events next year even if I don't shoot. Maybe I'll get a booth selling apparel and accessories.

So I get this email. I'm thinking there's no way I'm giving away that many photos, but maybe we can work out a bulk deal or something like that. My immediate thought went to the Pay the Writer video; watermarks and credit don't mean much.

..i dont get it. did you shoot an event for free or something?
regardless the answer should be no. even if you shot them for free, thats a lot of time spent organizing to not make any money.

It's about World Cup, from a team I wasn't hired by, but happened to get some of over the course of the event. Free is definitely not happening. Maybe a deal, but definitely not for free. And I'm 95% certain he'll try using them for commercial promotion without my permission.

It's about World Cup, from a team I wasn't hired by, but happened to get some of over the course of the event. Free is definitely not happening. Maybe a deal, but definitely not for free. And I'm 95% certain he'll try using them for commercial promotion without my permission.

So I get this email. I'm thinking there's no way I'm giving away that many photos, but maybe we can work out a bulk deal or something like that. My immediate thought went to the Pay the Writer video; watermarks and credit don't mean much.

Hey guys, quick question.
When shooting black and white, is it best to set "monochrome" in the camera and shoot raw?, or would it be better to do it on the computer?

Thanks

All that will affect if you're shooting RAW is your preview image on the screen. When you load the images into Lightroom, they'll appear grayscale at first, then pop into colour once the actual RAW preview loads. The only advantage to setting it on camera is that you can check your composition and base light/contrast levels on the LCD in something similar to the end image, without the distraction of colour.